MoreEnumerableCompareCountTFirst, TSecond Method
Compares two sequences and returns an integer that indicates whether the first sequence
has fewer, the same or more elements than the second sequence.
Namespace: MoreLinqAssembly: MoreLinq (in MoreLinq.dll) Version: 4.0.0+092a40d82a1b280568ffa006d9a210bdec0792cd
public static int CompareCount<TFirst, TSecond>(
this IEnumerable<TFirst> first,
IEnumerable<TSecond> second
)
<ExtensionAttribute>
Public Shared Function CompareCount(Of TFirst, TSecond) (
first As IEnumerable(Of TFirst),
second As IEnumerable(Of TSecond)
) As Integer
public:
[ExtensionAttribute]
generic<typename TFirst, typename TSecond>
static int CompareCount(
IEnumerable<TFirst>^ first,
IEnumerable<TSecond>^ second
)
[<ExtensionAttribute>]
static member CompareCount :
first : IEnumerable<'TFirst> *
second : IEnumerable<'TSecond> -> int
- first IEnumerableTFirst
- The first sequence
- second IEnumerableTSecond
- The second sequence
- TFirst
- Element type of the first sequence
- TSecond
- Element type of the second sequence
Int32-1 if the first sequence has the fewest elements,
0 if the two sequences have the same number of elements
or
1 if the first sequence has the most elements.In Visual Basic and C#, you can call this method as an instance method on any object of type
IEnumerableTFirst. When you use instance method syntax to call this method, omit the first parameter. For more information, see
Extension Methods (Visual Basic) or
Extension Methods (C# Programming Guide).
var first = new[] { 123, 456 };
var second = new[] { 789 };
var result = first.CompareCount(second);
The
result variable will contain
1.